There is no marriage waiting period in Ohio. Couples can get marriage licenses from their counties and simply head down to City Hall to tie the knot during the times listed below and take Whaley up on her offer.

Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley performed the first gay marriage at Dayton City Hall Friday morning, June 26, 2015, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled same-sex couples have a constitutional right to marry. (Source: Dayton Daily News)

"The 2004 constitutional ban on gay marriage in Ohio was something we could not get over without the Supreme Court actions," she said. "This is just a huge win for the city in having some help from the Supreme Court in really being open and inclusive and celebrating equality."

Whaley said she is proud of the Supreme Court's decision.

"I have always struggled with the fact that I have friends who did not have the rights that I have," she said. "For the people that I care about to be able to marry the people they love makes my marriage richer."

Gay couples wishing to get married in Dayton will have help with services.

The restaurant will have special cocktails today called Unity and Rainbow Kisses.

The issue is all about equality, Wick-Gagnet told me.

"It is about love. It is about peace. It is about creating a culture of love and acceptance," she said. "I am happy to have an opportunity to be a part of a celebration that honors those basic principles of life."

"Everybody in life deserves to be happy," she said. "This ruling is just going to give hope to so many couples in Ohio who have been waiting to say those vows in front of friends and family just as heterosexual couples have for hundreds of years."